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11-13-2001, 09:16 PM | #11 | |
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Daetheron,
I will reply in more detail to your post later, but two things for now. I do not claim that universal laws apply in the same way to all of space. I will clarify this more, but it is crucial for understanding my concept of universal laws. Quote:
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11-13-2001, 10:52 PM | #12 |
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RW:
After a quick jaunt to good ol' eb.com I realize I ain't got time to find out exactly what you mean by "model", whether it is a specific term for method, so forth, so I will have to risk showing my green-ness and hash it out in layman's terms. First, I am assuming you don't mean truth in the sense of that litany of things that can give "meaning" to our lives, though that is not to say that Truth isn't in the litany. But if you mean truth as actuality , reality which may be over and against our subjective experience, I must say that I strive obsessively for objectivity through self-reflection(do I really believe this to be true, or do I just want to believe it for something I consider to be sufficient or expedient) and the best empirical observations I can make, and then sift it through--yes,intuition--gulp--and hold to all that until new info yields a different result from the process. Now I realize that I've probably just given you more of an offhand description of my conglomerate philosophy, rather than a succint answer to your question, but maybe you can glean something of what you want from that, and maybe make some inferences from my profile until I can digest the epistemology article in Brittanica and some more from the II Library and clarify. Right now I've got to sleep, because I get up at six to get ready to sling lumber for the day--YUUUUKK!!! P+C, Barry |
11-13-2001, 11:28 PM | #13 |
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To SeeKayaker:
1. What you call the "laws of logic" are consequences from the semantics of the language we use to describe the world. Thus they don't need any transcendental foundation, and aren't "absolute laws" in any sense. If quantum effects had played a larger role in everyday life (before the technological revolution, of course), our logic might easily be trivalent (true, indeterminate,false), as has been proposed by Reichenbach. The situation of mathematical theorems is similar. Neither the presence nor the absence of gods will change the fundamental theorem of algebra, once the terms "complex number", "polynomial" etc. have been defined - and who has defined them: human mathematicians. 2. You base the regularities of nature on a transcendental basis, to wit the existence of a Creator. A non-theist might base them equally well on the absence of intermeddling gods. You postulate that the default state of the universe is "total chaos" (whatever that means). A non-theist might equally well postulate that the default state of the universe contains some patterns; said patterns remain because there are no supernatural beings to disturb them. It is a poor metaphysical argument when it doesn't work both ways ;-) HRG. |
11-14-2001, 04:54 AM | #14 | ||||
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11-14-2001, 05:04 PM | #15 | ||
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Well, I certainly have received many responses! With a Latin III test tomorrow, I do not have the time to answer everyone individually right now, but I will try to address some of the major themes that I have seen in the objections. I should be able to spend more time on this forum this weekend and next week. Some of what I am presenting as objections to my arguments are quotations from other posts and some are paraphrases, but I have tried not to take anything out of context.
First Objection: the entire basis for my argument is ad ignorantiam if I claim that because the atheist has not proved that he can use these laws there is no way for him to prove that he can do so. Response: I can understand how it appears that I am arguing ad ignorantiam. Often, the difference between a fallacious argument and a valid one (if it is an informal logical fallacy in question) can be a very slight change in the wording of the conclusion. I have neither spelled my conclusion out as clearly as I should have nor been as careful in my wording of it as I should have been. Therefore, I would like to propose a slightly reworded conclusion to my argument. I would like to say that the atheist lacks a basis for consistently using the universal laws that form the foundation for the laws of science and logic. I would also say that the Christian has the basis for consistently using these laws. If these conclusions were completely true, they would not absolutely prove that Christianity is true, but they would prove that atheism is inconsistent. For the atheist to object to my saying that atheism is inconsistent on the basis that we have no way for it to achieve internal consistency (saying or implying that such a way could appear in the future) is to argue on the basis of evidence that does not exist. If such a way appears in the future, people will revisit these issues. However, you cannot claim that I have no ability to declare atheism inconsistent because more evidence in favor of your position might show up in the future (I think that this is the opposite form of ad ignorantiam, but it might be some other an informal fallacy). Second Objection: Quote:
I do not know if this is a normal distinction for the Christian presuppositionalist that I am making here, but I think that it is important and would like to maintain it throughout my argument. Third Objection: Quote:
Since I have not asked any of you directly, how do you think the universe came to be [I reworded this question in response to Datheron's point - I did not mean to ask a loaded question] (TollHouse, I am particularly interested in your view on this)? I do not want to be setting up a straw man, and some of you apparently do not attribute the existence of the universe to random chance, so I would like to hear to what you attribute it. I wonder if atheists on here would be willing just to post whether or not they believe that universal laws exist (with, if possible, some short explanation of why). It seems to me that such a poll (I use the term loosely) could be interesting to see. I apologize to those whose comments I have not addressed (or have done so incompletely). You have raised many interesting points, and I will answer them as soon as I can. Thanks, SeaKayaker [ November 15, 2001: Message edited by: SeaKayaker ] |
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11-14-2001, 11:53 PM | #16 | |||||
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SeaKayaker,
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As for the part on "future possibility" - correct me if I'm wrong, but isn't that exactly the ad ignorantium fallacy? The fallacious argument comes from the fact that you have ruled out possibilities before you have proven that you can do such a thing; "I don't know" is just a general statement that admits to an infinite number of possibilities that may satisfy the query. For you to claim it inconsistent is for you to have claimed to have proven that it is inconsistent, that only one possibility exists. Quote:
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11-15-2001, 12:45 AM | #17 | |
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The Bible does not spell out the rules of formal logic, or scientific laws such as conservation of energy and so forth. Instead, all it contains are a few vague references to God "creating everything". Christians assume that their God provides a "basis" for the consistency of natural laws, but there is certainly no detailed explanation of how "God" supposedly accomplishes this. It is therefore hypocritical to expect an atheist to provide a detailed explanation of how these things came to be, or continue to operate: nobody knows. |
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11-15-2001, 12:02 PM | #18 |
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Seakayaker:
Sorry for the delay in reply. I have a family emergency. As much as I would love to, I don't have time for posts right now. I'll check back in a few days (If my situation allows) and try then. Sorry. |
11-15-2001, 02:25 PM | #19 |
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Datheron,
In order to respond to what you have said, I need to understand one slightly different, yet related, aspect of your worldview. Before addressing the laws of science any more, I would like to know your ultimate standard of truth (if you indeed do believe that objective truth exists). Do you think that science and logic determine what is true, or do you have some other ultimate standard? If I do not see a response from you to this before I log off for the evening, I may still post my response, assuming that you consider science and logic the ultimate standards of truth (I will mention this assumption in that post, too). Thanks, SeaKayaker |
11-15-2001, 04:14 PM | #20 | |
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SeaKayaker,
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